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Newswire on the IFIs

  • Bangladesh exposes flaws in World Bank's Doing Business Index
  • A flawed 'Doing Business' report
  • Risk and accountability: What role for the Inspection Panel?
  • Rio Tinto gets Australian government loan for Mongolian mine project
  • Deutsche Bank and IFC accused of bankrolling Vietnam firms' land grabs
  • World Bank data on measure of global poverty level faulted
more


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Sustainability

Africa's Renaissance - Seminar at Carleton University, October 31, 1 - 2:30PM

The Africa-Canada Forum (Canadian Council for International Cooperation), the Halifax Initiative & the Institute of African Studies present a critical discussion regarding economic growth, aid and sustainable development in Africa. Speakers include Tetteh Hormeku-Ajei (Third World Network), James Henry (formerly McKinsey & Co.) and Vitalice Meja (Reality of Aid).

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Monthly Issue Update - January 31, 2012

Energy poverty, climate change and the World Bank; Durban postmortem.

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Monthly Issue Update - June 30, 2011

The role of the World Bank in climate finance; Europeans raise the bar on export credit disclosure; the FTT; glacier protection in Argentina; new UN working group.

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Canadian Coalition on Climate Change & Development submission: ODA Accountablity Consultation, 2011

Return of the financial transactions tax

Embassy Magazine, Feb. 16, 2011

By John Jacobs

In spite of Canada's attempt to bury it at the Toronto G20 meeting, a tax on financial transactions is back on the global agenda and gaining momentum.

French President Nicolas Sarkozy has pledged to use his term as chair of the G20 to reform the global financial system and curb the speculation that contributed to the economic crisis. At the top of his agenda is an international financial transactions tax (FTT) to fund the fight against poverty and climate change.

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The Millennium Development Goals

Definitely not the G8  
  • Definitely NOT the G8 MAIN PAGE
  • CLICK TO LISTEN to Definitely NOT the G8 - MDG Podcast
  • Download to your IPod at http://itunes.apple.com/ca/podcast/dntg8/id378699606
  • PRODUCTION NOTES: 
    • General acknowledgements
    • MDG specific acknowledgements 
    • Interviewees
    • Funders and contributors
    • Full MDG script (word doc)

Final script May 22, 2010; release date June 18, 2010.

You are missing some Flash content that should appear here! Perhaps your browser cannot display it, or maybe it did not initialize correctly.

audio/mpeg iconDNTG8 - MDGs.mp3
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Bridge to South Korea: Global civil society meeting on the G20

Bridge to South Korea

Held in Toronto, on Monday and Tuesday, June 21-22, 2010, just ahead of the G8 Summit in Huntsville and the G20 Summit in Toronto, this meeting was intended as a strategy session for civil society organizations, platforms and networks from many G20 countries (and beyond) to discuss diverse perspectives on both the G20 as an institution and priorities with respect to its agenda.

As the outcome of an initial G20 strategy meeting in Washington DC in April of 2010 among various groups, the intention of this broader meeting of national, regional and international networks was three-fold:

  • To develop a greater understanding of the key issues on the G20 agenda as well as alternative agendas seeking to influence the G20;
  • To strengthen and solidify strategic connections among G20 and non-G20 countries in the lead up to the South Korean and French G20 meetings and strengthen the capacities of networks to develop their own analysis and strategies for confronting the G20;
  • To develop concrete ideas and proposals for collaboration with South Korean colleagues for the November Summit.

MEETING DETAILS

  • Final concept note - Bridge to South Korea: Global G20 Meeting
  • Final concept note - en Español
  • Final agenda
  • Participant's list
  • Presentations
    • Peter Chowla - G20 and public finance policy
    • Aniket Bhushan - G20 and private finance policy
  • Calendar of events (including events in South Korea)
  • Final Report | Rapport final
  • Final Report - en Español
  • Mapping of national groups and priorities
  • Key contacts and focal points working on G20 issues
  • Funders

Bridge to South Korea

Held in Toronto, on Monday and Tuesday, June 21-22, 2010, just ahead of the G8 Summit in Huntsville and the G20 Summit in Toronto, this meeting was intended as a strategy session for civil society organizations, platforms and networks from many G20 countries (and beyond) to discuss diverse perspectives on both the G20 as an institution and priorities with respect to its agenda.

As the outcome of an initial G20 strategy meeting in Washington DC in April of 2010 among various groups, the intention of this broader meeting of national, regional and international networks was three-fold:

  • To develop a greater understanding of the key issues on the G20 agenda as well as alternative agendas seeking to influence the G20;
  • To strengthen and solidify strategic connections among G20 and non-G20 countries in the lead up to the South Korean and French G20 meetings and strengthen the capacities of networks to develop their own analysis and strategies for confronting the G20;
  • To develop concrete ideas and proposals for collaboration with South Korean colleagues for the November Summit.

MEETING DETAILS

  • Final concept note - Bridge to South Korea: Global G20 Meeting
  • Final concept note - en Español
  • Final agenda
  • Participant's list
  • Presentations
    • Peter Chowla - G20 and public finance policy
    • Aniket Bhushan - G20 and private finance policy
  • Calendar of events (including events in South Korea)
  • Final Report | Rapport final
  • Final Report - en Español
  • Mapping of national groups and priorities
  • Key contacts and focal points working on G20 issues
  • Funders
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  • 3 attachments

Press Responses: June 9, 2010

http://www.embassymag.ca/page/view/tax-06-09-2010

Financial transaction tax is no bank tax

By Fraser Reilly-King
Published June 9, 2010
   
Big banks can finally breathe a sigh of relief.

This past weekend, Canadian Finance Minister Jim Flaherty managed to rally China, Brazil and South Korea behind him at G20 meetings in Busan, South Korea, and put those pesky discussions about a global bank tax to rest.

Instead of discussing a bank tax at this month's summit, the G20 agreed to "develop principles reflecting the need to protect taxpayers, reduce risks from the financial system, protect the flow of credit in good times and bad, taking into account individual country's circumstances and options."

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Monthly Issue Update - April 30, 2010

IMF, European Union look to bail out Greece
Greece’s debt crisis is finally coming to a head, with International Monetary Fund (IMF) loans to deal with the country’s deficit and heavy debt load being hammered out in Athens. The European Union and the IMF are negotiating the terms of a bailout as fears mount that Greece’s crisis could soon spread to other countries in Europe and beyond. Other nations carrying significant debt loads, including the United States, are concerned that the Greek crisis is a harbinger of things to come, closer to home.

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Policy Brief: The Financial Transaction Tax (FTT) - An idea whose time has come - April 2010

Introduction
A growing number of politicians, civil society organizations, economists and some financiers have become strong advocates of a global Financial Transactions Tax (FTT). An FTT is a tiny tax on financial market transactions such as equity, bond, derivative or foreign exchange trades.

Political leaders, including the presidents of France and Germany and the prime minister of Britain, back an FTT as one of the best ways to fund programs to fight world poverty, pay for climate mitigation and adaptation costs and make financial institutions pay their fair share of the costs of the global crisis which, in large part, was created by their practices. Prominent economists advocate a Financial Transactions Tax as one way to cool down excessive speculation in financial markets, a principal cause of the economic crisis.

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